Attributed to Sir Thomas Wyatt,[1] this poem was entered by H8. R. A. Rebholz suggests that "Ons me thoght ffortune me kist" may be riddle-like because it proposes contradictory meanings: Fortune grants the speaker either his lady’s love, or power over his own heart.[2] The poem's meaning depends, ultimately, on the interpretation of “my none” in line 6. The poem also appears in Tottel's Miscellany under the title “The louer reioiceth the enioying of his loue” (item 86).[3]